Thursday, May 02, 2024

Free Speech Zone? Or Free-Fire Zone?

 It's a question of free speech--until the vandalism and criminal trespass starts up.

But wait!  There's More!!!

...Fox 7 reported that after Travis County police cleared out the University of Texas in Austin and arrested 80 people, they uncovered stashes of guns (yes, guns), chains, mallets, and bricks around the encampment. Furthermore, 45 of those arrested were not in any way affiliated with the Longhorns, either as students, faculty, or staff. . . 

People of the Jewish persuasion (such as Sefton, at the link) tell us this is all anti-Semitic (read:  anti-Jewish) grunting.

I'm not so sure about that.  Yes, some are there because they dislike Jews and may actually be protesting what appears to be an extreme over-reaction in Gaza by the IDF.

But it's larger than that.  This is the Permanent Revolution, financed by Soros (a Jew) and a number of other traditionally-revolutionary sources within the Tides Foundation.  (We're not the only ones with this view, either.)

The irony is that the Permanent Revolution's permanent cadre of leaders happen to be almost all Jews.  Or maybe it's not ironic, and this is merely a 'Shiny Object' moment for that cadre.

In any case, since they appear to be willing to start the shooting and maiming, it's prudent to take a bit of target practice before strolling into the campus, no?

3 comments:

  1. Permanent Revolution? Yes indeed, William Thomas Walsh wrote about the "permanent revolution" but he did not know by that term back his day.
    History does repeat and the revolution is permanent.

    "Isabella of Spain: The Last Crusader" by William Thomas Walsh is a historical biography of Queen Isabella I of Castile, who ruled Spain from 1474 to 1504. The book explores Isabella's life, from her childhood to her rise to power, her reign, and her legacy. It covers her marriage to King Ferdinand II of Aragon, her role in the Spanish Inquisition, and her support for Christopher Columbus' voyage to the New World. The author also delves into the religious and political context of Isabella's reign, including the Reconquista, the expulsion of the Jews from Spain, and the tensions between Christians and Muslims in Europe. ""Isabella of Spain: The Last Crusader"" provides a comprehensive and engaging portrait of one of the most influential monarchs in European history.


    Please note that Amazon does not sell this book. It s entirely to truthful about stupid jewish tricks

    ebay has it......for now

    Anything written before 1950 is usually pretty good.
    Other books by William Thomas Walsh (1891-1949)

    http://www.catholicauthors.com/walsh.html

    Bibliography:
    The Mirage of the Many (1910)
    Isabella of Spain (1930; Rockford, Illinois: TAN Books and Publishers, 1987)
    Out of the Whirlwind (novel, 1935)
    Philip II (1937; Rockford, Illinois: TAN Books and Publishers, 1987)
    Shekels (blank-verse play, 1937)
    Lyric Poems (1939)
    Characters of the Inquisition (1940; Rockford, Illinois: TAN Books and Publishers, 1987)
    "Gold" (short story)
    Babies, not Bullets! (booklet, 1940)
    Thirty Pieces of Silver (a play in verse)
    Saint Teresa of Avila (1943; Rockford, Illinois: TAN Books and Publishers, 1987)
    La actual situation de Espana (booklet, 1946)
    Our Lady of Fatima (1947)
    The Carmelites of Compiegne (a play in verse)
    Saint Peter, the Apostle (1948)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Uncle Screwtape, I tempted Dad29 into speaking a taboo subject.

    Well done Wormwood, to what taboo did you entice him?

    Uncle Screwtape, he expressed honest thoughts about a subgroup of J…

    HUSH WORMWOOD! Some thoughts are to taboo for even demons to speak.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The prayer for the Jews in the pre-1955 Mass of the Presanctified on Good Friday reads as follows:

    Let us pray also for the faithless Jews [perfidis Judaeis]: that Almighty God may remove the veil from their hearts; so that they too may acknowledge Jesus Christ our Lord. [No instruction to kneel or to rise is given, but immediately is said:] Almighty and eternal God, who dost not exclude from Thy mercy even Jewish faithlessness [Judaicam perfidiam]: hear our prayers, which we offer for the blindness of that people; that acknowledging the light of thy Truth, which is Christ, they may be delivered from their darkness. Through the same our Lord Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with thee in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, for ever and ever. Amen.

    Henri de Lubac — no traditionalist, to be sure — devotes an entire chapter of his famous work Medieval Exegesis to the meaning of the word perfidis in patristic literature, and (surprise!) it turns out that it does NOT mean “perfidious” or “treacherous” or “nefarious.” In Christian vocabulary, it is the right word to designate the idea of being unfaithful to a commitment one had undertaken. The Israelites accepted the old covenant, which was ordered to accepting the Messiah. By not having received Him when He came, they were guilty of infidelity to the Lord. Thus, the phraseology is absolutely correct.


    https://www.newliturgicalmovement.org/2020/12/the-truthfulness-of-pre-1955-good.html

    ReplyDelete